« Blog justice | Main | Microsoft vs. Microsoft »

Updike's speech

May 26, 2006

Sid Steward, a Rough Type reader, alerted me to the fact that BookExpo America has just released an audio recording of John Updike's speech from last weekend, in which he responds to Kevin Kelly's New York Times article "Scan This Book!" (I discussed Kelly's article here and Updike's response here.) As BookExpo says, "Mr. Updike abandoned a speech about his new book, Terrorist, in favor of a passionate discussion of books and booksellers - whom he called 'the citadels of light.'" I haven't listened to it yet, but Sid says, "It moved me to tears."

Thanks, Sid.

Comments

Updike says that books have edges that separate the ideas of one author from another: "For some of us, books are intrinsic to our human identity."

Now I understand why Mr. Carr wishes so vehemently for Wikipedia's death. Beyond the monetary aspect, Wikipedia suppresses an author's identity and compromises the power of his assertions. Worse still, Wikipedia does so without the author's permission. If one says that he edits at Wikipedia, the next thing out of his mouth is usually a disclaimer that he disagrees with much of what is written. This disclaimer is necessary because the Wiki promotes the idea that its content is consensual, when in fact it can only truly be described as the opinion of the last editor.

While wishing for the death of a useful new technology is always a vain hope, planning for an even more beneficial technology is realistic. A replacement for Wikipedia must cover every advantageous aspect of the original and, per Updike's speech, it must allow the work to retain the power of our human identity.

Posted by: Zephram Stark [TypeKey Profile Page] at May 27, 2006 04:15 PM

Post a comment

Thanks for signing in, . Now you can comment. (sign out)

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)


Remember me?


carrshot5.jpg Subscribe to Rough Type

Now in paperback:
shallowspbk2.jpg Pulitzer Prize Finalist

"Riveting" -San Francisco Chronicle

"Rewarding" -Financial Times

"Revelatory" -Booklist

Order from Amazon

Visit The Shallows site

The Cloud, demystified: bigswitchcover2thumb.jpg "Future Shock for the web-apps era" -Fast Company

"Ominously prescient" -Kirkus Reviews

"Riveting stuff" -New York Post

Order from Amazon

Visit Big Switch site

Greatest hits

The amorality of Web 2.0

Twitter dot dash

The engine of serendipity

The editor and the crowd

Avatars consume as much electricity as Brazilians

The great unread

The love song of J. Alfred Prufrock's avatar

Flight of the wingless coffin fly

Sharecropping the long tail

The social graft

Steve's devices

MySpace's vacancy

The dingo stole my avatar

Excuse me while I blog

Other writing

Is Google Making Us Stupid?

The ignorance of crowds

The recorded life

The end of corporate computing

IT doesn't matter

The parasitic blogger

The sixth force

Hypermediation

More

Nick's first book: Order from Amazon

Visit book site

Rough Type is:

Written and published by
Nicholas Carr

Designed by

JavaScript must be enabled to display this email address.

What?